I enjoyed this a lot, but man it took me for. ev. ver. to read. It's
really long for a start, but it's also throws a lot of stuff at you from
all directions. And it's all cool stuff, but I had to go up a gear in
my brain to keep track of it all.
We have two ambassador-spies,
(fact: I bought this book based solely on the promise of ambassador
spies), Vincent and Angelo. (His full name is Michelangelo Osiris Leary
Kusunagi-Jones, and there's an explanation for this ridiculousness in
the book, a good one even, but still. What a name). They were once
lovers, but have been apart for seventeen years after their affair was
discovered. Homosexuality, under the rule of the Governors who represent
Old Earth and control much of this universe, is super illegal. They
were lucky not to be straight up killed for it.
But now they're
needed for this mission to a planet called New Amazonia. As the name
suggests, it's all super matriarchal and shit. There are men, but they
are very much second class citizens, divided into two roles: stud, and
gentle. Gentle males, or "safe" males as the New Amazonian society views
them, are gay. This is why Vincent and Angelo have been reunited; the
woman who rule New Amazonia would only accept "gentle" ambassadors. (So
much of the New Amazonian and Old Earth societies is interesting
subversions on ours. Not just the gender stuff, but also the approach to
energy use and resources and stuff. It was really cool).
And the
Governors, on behalf of Old Earth, really need this diplomatic mission
to go well. Energy use is a huge issue for the rest of the universe, but
New Amazonia has a seemiglny unlimited supply. Vincent and Angelo are
to get them to share their secrets, peacefully or.... otherwise.
But
both men have their own agendas, and this is where a good chunk of this
book struggled for me. Figuring out Angelo and Vincent's differing
agendas and keeping them straight was a real mission. Oh and also Lesa,
our New Amazonian POV, who also has an angenda other than the one
everyone is pretending to have on the surface.
I think because
both of them had complicated backstories and complicated true purposes
for being on New Amazonia, and it tied into the complicated history of
the universe Bear had created, and was influenced by the complicated
politics of social strata of New Amazonia. So all these complicated
little balls were bouncing off each other in all directions and I was
expected to juggle them.
After the fifty percent point I started
to feel like I understood the history and politics that were informing
what everyone did. The reality of the Governors and everyone's
motivations and all of it clicked into place, which made the second half
way more enjoyable for me than the first. I still enjoyed the first
half, I was just confused a lot. I really loved watching Vincent and
Angelo circle around and figure out what their relationship looked like
now. The way they would describe each other and the way they interacted
was like soothing aloe vera on the confusing burn of everything else.
I
thought more than once while I read this that it would be enjoyed by
folks who loved the recent and fantastic This Is How You Lose The Time
War. It doesn't reach the same poetic heights, but that 'spies who love
each other' vibe is all over this. You and Me vs. all our bosses.
So
yeah. I have no idea why this book has so few ratings, because
Elizabeth Bear is fantastic and this is a fantastic book by her. Imagine
being so prolific that a book like this could become almost forgotten
amid your incredible back catalogue?